The glass-like transition behavior of concentrated aqueous solutions of bovine serum albumin was examined using rheological techniques. At mass fractions >0.4, there was a marked concentration dependence of viscosity with a glass-like kinetic arrest observed at mass fractions in the region of 0.55. At mass fractions >0.6 the material behaved as a solid with a Young's modulus rising from approximately 20 MPa at a mass fraction of 0.62-1.1 GPa at 0.86. The solid was viscoelastic and exhibited stress relaxation with relaxation times increasing from 33 to 610 s over the same concentration range. The concentration dependence of the osmotic pressure was measured, at intermediate concentrations, using an osmotic stress technique and could be described using a hard sphere model, indicating that the intermolecular interactions were predominantly repulsive. In summary, a major structural relaxation results from the collective motion of the globules at the supra-globule length scale and, at 20 degrees C, this is arrested at water contents of 40% w/w. This appears to be analogous to the glass transition in colloidal hard spheres.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1303695 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0006-3495(03)74808-5 | DOI Listing |
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